IEEE-USA Year In Review: 2006

[Jan][Feb][March][April][May][June][July][Aug][Sept][Oct][Nov][Dec]
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January
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On January 2, IEEE-USA's 2006
Government Fellows began their year-long
assignments. Steven Bonk is spending his
year as a Congressional Fellow on the staff of
U.S. Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA) working on
science and energy issues. Scott Jordan
will spend a year on the staff of Rep. Ben
Nelson (D-NE) working on telecommunications and
internet issues. And Engineering &
Diplomacy Fellow Steve Czuchlewski is advising
the State Department's Bureau of International
Security and Non-proliferation.
As part of its policy emphasis on promoting
innovation, during January, IEEE-USA has
endorsed the
National Innovation Act and the
Protecting America's Competitive Edge
legislation, and announced its support for the
Administration's
American Competitiveness Initiative.
In January, IEEE-USA released an
E-Book on
The State of Radio Frequency Identification
(RFID) Implementation and Its Policy
Implications.
During January, IEEE-USA supported a Student
Professional Awareness Conference at Brigham
Young University (Jan. 28)
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February |
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IEEE-USA Career & Workforce Policy Committee
Chair Paul Kostek addressed "Offshoring and U.S.
Competitiveness" as a speaker at the IEEE Int'l
Solid States Circuits Conference on 7 Feb. in
San Francisco.
Three IEEE U.S. members were
recognized as
"New Faces of Engineering" during Engineers Week
(EWeek). The New Faces program highlights
the vitality, diversity and rich contributions
of engineers under 30.
The IEEE-USA Board of Directors meets on 17 Feb.
in Scottsdale, Arizona.
IEEE-USA sponsored five $1,000 recognition
awards for students who participate in volunteer
capacity building projects for Engineers Without
Borders (EWB)-USA. The awards, given in such
areas as appropriate technology and sustainable
legacy, were presented at the EWB-USA
international conference at Rice University in
Houston (16-18 Feb. 2006).
IEEE-USA awarded its sixth annual
Best Communications System Award to the St.
Philip Neri School of Midwest City, Oklahoma at
Engineers Week Future City Competition Finals on
22 February.
As a featured guest on National Public Radio's
Science Friday on 24 Feb., IEEE-USA
President Ralph W. Wyndrum Jr. emphasized the
need to support more qualified math and science
teachers as one way to ensure U.S.
competitiveness in high technology. To hear the
complete NPR interview with the IEEE-USA
President and two other guests, click
here.
In February, IEEE-USA released an
E-Book on Interoperability for the
National Health Information Network.
During February, IEEE-USA supported Student
Professional Awareness Conferences at the
University of Florida (Feb. 20), Michigan State
(Feb. 20), Rice University (Feb. 21) and Rowan
University (Feb. 23).
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March |
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IEEE-USA held its 2006
Leadership Workshop on 3-5 March at the
Hyatt Regency Hotel at Union Station in St.
Louis, Mo. Among the highlights was a
keynote speech by former NSF Deputy Director
Joseph Bordogna on the implications of
globalization for the engineering profession.
On
March 8,
the Senate
Energy and Natural Resources Committee
unanimously approved the
IEEE-USA-backed Protect America's
Competitive Edge (PACE) Energy Act (S. 2197).
Committee Chair Pete Domenici (R-NM) applauded
the vote, noting "with the PACE bills, America
is making a renewed investment in math, science
and technology. I consider this the first major
American effort in this arena since our response
to the launch of Sputnik almost 50 years ago."
On
March 12, the House of Representatives passed
IEEE-USA-supported legislation to amend the
High-Performance Computing Act of 1991, updating
program requirements and directing OSTP to
establish goals and priorities for federal
high-performance computing research,
development, networking, and other activities.
As a
participant in the congressional
Research
Caucus, IEEE-USA sponsored a congressional
briefings on the FY07 R&D Budget Request,
highlighting a report by the American
Association for the Advancement of Science
(AAAS) (March 9).
In a trio of March statements, IEEE-USA provided
advice to Congress on promoting
innovation and competitiveness, the need for
permanent
immigration reforms in lieu of proposals for
more H-1B guestworker visas, and the use of
electronic health records in the federal
health insurance program.
Congressional Visits Day was held on 28-29
March. Over 40 IEEE members joined nearly
250 scientists, engineers, researchers,
educators and technology executives in
Washington in an annual event designed to raise
visibility and support for science, engineering
and technology.
IEEE-USA Vice President Ron Hira
appeared on NBC Nightly News with Brian
Williams on March 30th and said that hiring
guest workers at a lower cost “undercuts and
undermines U.S. workers.”
On March 18, IEEE-USA sponsored a Workshop on
Engineering Ethics in St. Louis, organized by
the IEEE St. Louis Section as a member
professional awareness activity.
On March 25 IEEE-USA sponsored a Career
Make-Over Workshop in Portland, organized by the
IEEE Oregon Section as a member professional
awareness activity.
In March, IEEE-USA released an
E-Book Career Planning Guide.
During March, IEEE-USA supported Professional
Development Seminars organized by the St. Louis
Section and the Oregon Section (March 25).
During March, IEEE-USA supported Student
Professional Awareness Conferences at Louisiana
Tech (March 15), Penn State University -
Harrisburg (March 17), University of Michigan -
Dearborn (March 17, Virginia Tech (March 24),
University of Southern California (March 25),
University of Washington (March 30) and
University of Hawaii (March 30).
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April |
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IEEE-USA
co-sponsored an April 6 congressional briefing
on
Changes in Global Science, Engineering and
Technology Competition, which highlighted
findings from the National Science Board's
report, "Science and Engineering Indicators
2006."
IEEE-USA is co-sponsoring the IEEE Workshop on
Wind Power: Technology, Economics and Politics,
set for 20-21 April in Washington, DC.
In April, IEEE-USA released an
E-Book on Communicating With Congress.
On 27 April, Engineering & Diplomacy Fellow
Steve Czuchlewski joined several dozen European
Union diplomats at the Cosmos Club in Washington
as part of an event organized by the science
attaché of the French Embassy to recognize the
60th anniversary of the computer and the IEEE
Computer Society.
On April 28, IEEE-USA President Wyndrum
participated in a consultative meeting organized
by the U.S.-China Cooperation Program in Science
Policy, Research, and Education to discuss
issues and prospective speakers for the
China-U.S. S&T Policy Forum, to be held October
16-17, 2006 in Beijing.
In April, over 14,700 IEEE members responded to
the 2006 Salary Survey; our second-highest
response ever.
During April, IEEE-USA supported a Professional
Development Seminar organized by the Siouxland
Section (April 14).
During April, IEEE-USA supported Student
Professional Awareness Conferences at Texas Tech
(April 6), Univ. of Texas at San Antonio (April
8), Columbia University (April 11), Univ. of
Massachusetts-Dartmouth (April 13), Case Western
Reserve (April 15), Valparaiso (April 17), Cal
State-Long Beach (April 19), Youngstown State
(April 21), University of Texas-Arlington (April
21) and Manhattan College (April 21).
During April, IEEE-USA also supported a Student
Professional Awareness Venture at Utah State
University.
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May |
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On May 4, IEEE-USA unveiled its
Entrepreneurs Village, an online portal
designed to provide high-tech entrepreneurs with
useful tools and resources and prospective
entrepreneurs with mentors.
The 4th annual
Engineering R&D Symposium was held on 17-18
May in Washington, DC.
IEEE-USA President Ralph Wyndrum delivered a
keynote address to the the
Federal IPv6 Summit in Washington, DC on May
19.
IEEE-USA President Ralph Wyndum was the featured
speaker at a May 25th forum on the future of the
engineering industry in the United States
organized by Kettering University and its
student chapter of Eta Kappa Nu.
IEEE member and entrepreneur Oscar McKee and
former IEEE-USA President Paul Kostek
appeared on CNN's Lou Dobbs Tonight on May
22 to discuss how the H-1B program hurts small
U.S. high-tech businesses.
During May, IEEE-USA supported Student
Professional Awareness Conferences at UCLA (May
11 & 18) and University of California-Irvine
(May 12).
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June |
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On
June 5, IEEE student members Anthony Azevedo
(Univ. of California-Berkeley), Emily Van Vliet
(Cedarville College) and Sasha Kemmet (Iowa
State University) — shown here with IEEE-USA
President-Elect John Meredith — began their
summer program with the Washington Internships
for Students of Engineering (WISE).
On
June 7, the House Science Committee unanimously
approved IEEE-USA-backed
legislation (H.R. 5356 as amended & H.R.
5358)that would strengthen key education and
research programs at the National Science
Foundation (NSF) and the Energy Department’s
Office of Science. According to Science
Committee Chair Sherwood Boehlert (R-NY): "These
measures represent an intelligent middle-ground
between those who want to create scores of new,
untested, expensive programs and those who argue
that all that’s necessary is to increase overall
funding for basic research and leave everything
else to chance."
IEEE-USA hosted a professional awareness
conference on "Career
Survival for Engineers and Scientists in the
21st Century" on June 10 at the University
of Michigan-Dearborn (Fairlane Center) in
conjunction with the SE Michigan Section.
In June, IEEE-USA’s two 2006 Mass Media Fellows,
PhD candidates Miriah Meyer of Salt Lake City
and Charles Emrich of Berkley, Calif.,
began their 10-week reporting assignments at
the Chicago Tribune and Sacramento Bee
newspapers, respectively.
In June, IEEE-USA released an
E-Book entitled "The Best of IEEE-USA's
Today's Engineer on Career Survival."
On June 15, IEEE-USA sponsored a Workshop on
Automation and Robotics in Galveston Bay, TX,
organized by the Galveston Bay Section with a
professional activities component.
On June 23, IEEE-USA unveiled a new six-panel
engineering careers brochure entitled "My
Science, My Math, My Engineering! How Am I Ever
Going to Use This Stuff in the Real World?,"
which is designed for 11-13-year-old, sixth-to
eighth-grade U.S. students.
The IEEE-USA Board of Directors met on 23 June
in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where they
approved new IEEE-USA position statements on
Fusion
Energy R&D,
Cyber Security R&D, and the
Use of Neutral Experts in Intellectual Property
Litigation.
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Updated: 19 March, 2007 Contact: IEEE-USA,
ieeeusa@ieee.org |